This is the second article 2 confirming Disney bought FanLib; I assume the information appears in a Disney financial report. Any Disney stockholders out there? The financial report may state the price paid for FanLib.

Take180 is visually ugly, and laden with "challenges" and prizes. It looks exactly the way you would expect FanLib to look after a quick re-do to serve Disney's interests. It is also riddled with the celebrity brown-nosing rampant at FanLib. The pitch (Be part of a creative community. Get in the spotlight. Prizes happen.) is nearly indistinguishable from Chris Williams's promotion of FanLib in July, 2007. 3

The men who owned FanLib (brothers Chris and David Williams) did not have the balls 4 to tell the 25,000 members of the sell-out. They have said nothing publicly on the subject (according to my daily news webcrawl since June, 2008). At the time of the closure, I speculated the only confirmation might be a FanLib-like product from Disney. 5 Now we have it. FanLib closed on August 4, 2008. 6 Take180 opened around August 29, 2008. 7

I had the lowest possible expectations of the Williams brothers, but even I didn't expect them to lie about matters of importance — not when the lies would inevitably be exposed. Apparently they thought lying was the better trade-off: better to lie and cowardly escape the reaction of fandom, even though they would be exposed later as liars.

Perhaps the FanLib founders feared their members would join Take180 and make a wreck of its forums, sullying its Disney purity. Perhaps they feared FanLib's failure 8 would foul Take180 before it was out of the dock. Or perhaps Disney publicists, reviewing the Williams brothers' track record 9 in communicating with fans, ordered them to be silent.

Five months have gone by since FanLib closed. Its members are scattered; articles about FanLib have dwindled. If nothing else, the lies bought time.

There's more. Craig Singer's current venture, the film Perkins' 14, came about this way:

"A year and a half ago, Singer was sorting through hundreds of one-paragraph ideas submitted through his Web site, FanLib [...]. The 10 fan finalists were then asked to create a 'video pitch' for their idea. It was a fan in North Carolina who came up with the premise of 'Perkins 14' [sic]— about a town that has suffered 14 child abductions, and the obsessed cop [...] who finds that the kids have been turned into zombified killing machines." 10

Craig Singer used a FanLib member's original idea to launch his new career? 11 I need a stronger stomach. Edit: Jeremy Donaldson's idea was submitted through massify.com in association with FanLib. 12

Another thing: numerous people in fandom (and outside of it) distrusted the Disney buyout rumor because it was farfetched Disney would believe a fanfiction website could be profitable (especially after FanLib's example). But Disney had no such foolish belief. Fanfiction appears at Take180 only as an interest in member profiles.

Take180 is built from FanLib's corpse, using a single limb added in October, 2007, vid hosting. 13 (Edit: Turns out this is literally true. Take180 URLs indicate it lives on FanLib's former servers.) Instead of the female dominated world of fanfiction, Take180 goes after amateur film makers — a fandom YouTube; you can imagine the corporate orgasm the concept would induce — presumably to gain the young male demographic FanLib slavered after. 14

Just one more thing. Confirmation of the Disney buyout means we must reconsider FanLib.

As a fanfiction archive and as a fandom community, FanLib was a disaster. 15 But as a money-making venture for a small group of wealthy white businessmen, it was a success: with $100 million 16 to spend on acquisitions, Disney probably paid quite a bit more for FanLib than its initial investment of $3 million in venture capital. 17

This is bad news for fandom; it will encourage future greedy and destructive corporate interference with fan creations.

Is it bad that I don't think it's even that bad, now that Disney's raked through it? It's less exploiting fandom and more... Like roofies. It's not really fanfiction or whatever anymore.

Now, they're giving a slightly better incentive -- it's not writing fic anymore, it's more like making a collaborative web show while Disney's got its claws in you and are leeching you for your advertising value.

It offers something in a slightly different sphere of influence. They're offering something that fic writers don't have -- visuals, and actors to play with. At the same time, they're missing out on what fic writers do have, which is freedom.

:< I thought the script and such was entirely dictated by the fans, but after poking around a little, I see it's just as retarded as before, without giving fans the power to create the storyline or anything.

...But if they had that kind of power, and it was really like, "we've got these 6 actors, you guys get to determine everything else, here is the kind of story setting we're hoping for", that would have been cool.

Yes, I think this demonstrates the real danger of fandom's increasing profile: not persecution but takeover, corruption, corporate parasitism. And the profile isn't really lower-able, I mean the web is the web, and I like being able to find fellow fans. But this highlights the new dangers we have to start being aware of. I'm not sure it's entirely possible, even with the web, to reach out enough to our newcomers and warn them to check their shiny prize-candy for poison and razor blades, but it seems like a worthwhile thing to start trying anyway.

I am also darkly amused that Syn hit the nail on the head, even though she was talking about LJ not Fanlib: it isn't IPO these people are after, it's sell-off. They don't care that the product is trash, they just want to make a wad of cash before the 2.0 bubble bursts. I can't help but think this is going to serve Disney right in another few years when it all goes kablooey.

I think what it means is this: fanboy horror vids are where the money is.

Seriously: it takes a lot more bandwidth to host vids; it is currently outside the reach of most fan-run sites. But hosting fanfiction is cheap, and can be done by fans with the help of advertising, donations, or both. FanLib tried to dress up their fanfiction archive with sleazy graphics, and failed.

What Take180 offers is far too limited to gain mass appeal (compared to, say, YouPorn), and eventually production/hosting of similar content will be cheap enough for an amateur website to handle. It will be dead/dying within 18 months.

So I should go back to the library and get back out that copy of Scott Westerfeld's Specials and either remove or graffiti on the back page advertising Fanlib? Normally I very strongly oppose damaging books, but this would be in a good cause.

These snake oil peddlers will always be around. They'll exploit and get some money out of their slights of hand, and try to make it seem like the second coming.

But in the end fanboys are not about to change the world. The fact alone that the hefty contribution of fangirls is pretty much ignored is enough to guarantee that. And I think the natural cynicism of true fans will take care of the rest.

I think this is one of the better possible outcomes, actually. Take180 looks like a very specialized project, with a very narrow focus which has nothing to do with fanfic. Cool. They can sit in their little niche, with whatever participants they can attract, and do their own thing and fanfic fandom can go back to doing our thing with no one trying to pick our pockets.

About the kid who came up with the idea Singer made into a movie, if the entry docs for whatever the event was said that submissions would become the property of Fanlib or whoever, and he decided to enter anyway? Oh, well. If they gave him everything they said they were going to give him as the winner, then there you go. He played, he won, he got his prize. If he knew in advance that his idea would become their property and he entered anyway, then there's really nothing for anyone to complain about. And if he didn't read the entry docs before submitting, well, maybe he will next time. And if he's really twelve then he has plenty of time to come up with better ideas, and develop them himself. I'll bet this was a great learning experience, and if he gets a part in the movie then that'll be fun too. If he comes out of this having learned to read everything before you enter/submit/sign/whatever, and to be cynical as hell, then IMO that's worth more than any check they might've given him.

Because seriously, if all fans were as cynical as you and me and the other people who slammed FanLib with facts, and threw their own statements back in their faces with notes and analyses, then it wouldn't matter what anyone did because fandom wouldn't be vulnerable to this crap.

I'm just as happy to have the site Disnified. It's not likely to attract any significant number of fanfic writers in its current incarnation. If it attracts Disney fans who are happy playing in the Disney sandbox with rides of about Teacup-intensity, good for them. I hope they have fun. Just as long as they're leaving me and mine alone, they can do what they like.

It may be a good outcome for some, but it was a terrible one for the FanLib members. First they had just two weeks notice to find themselves a new online home. Then they were allowed to believe "poor little FanLib" was closing because it was broke, not because it had sold out and made an enormous profit.

Hi, I got linked to your write-up of this whole thing from Fandom Wank, and I want to thank you for putting this thing together, since I had no idea about the details of this until I read your write up.

I did want to note that I'm a Disney Stockholder, and as soon as I get my yearly report and financial report this month, I'd be happy to give you details as well as scans, especially if they make a big deal out of it in the book they alway send out with it.

When it was founded in 2003, FanLib was a "crowdwriting" software company that hired itself out for corporate-sponsored writing contests, which were 100% marketing campaigns. Some of the writing contests were fanfiction writing contests. Many of FanLib's marketing campaigns for other companies, such as HarperTeenLit, did not mention FanLib at all (just as television ads don't mention they use Photoshop), although FanLib was their "backend."

In 2006, FanLib got the idea to use its software and its website to create a fanfiction archive. They received $3 million in venture capital to fund the "expansion."

What Disney appears to have bought is the software, the product FanLib used for its "crowdwriting for hire" gigs. Take180 works like all FanLib gigs in the past: round-robin voting, etc.

Disney did not get the fanfiction archive, which was obliterated, along with its 25,000 members, on August 4, 2008.

Oddly, all web-based marketing campaigns that used the FanLib software have also been obliterated. Sites such as projectferret.org, harperteenfanlit.com, and lword.fanlib.com are dead. Anything at all with fanlib.com in the URL address directs you to the Pinata bids you farewell (http://www.fanlib.com/) page.

Presumably, FanLib could have kept the fanfic archive alive, since I do not think it relied heavily on the FanLib software (and if it did, they could have transitioned it to a new platform). Based on its paltry site statistics, the fanfic archive was a financial burden, not a bonus, and the Williams brothers used the Disney buyout as an opportunity to dump it.

Who are apparently more easily motivated by money than interest in the source. I was surprised when watching the last episode of Leverage to see an attempt at fansite building for it, offering a substantial cash prize to people who played a Leverage game online. Up until now these network marketing efforts seem to have focused on access to extra material or chats with actors.

My friends tell me cash is a common incentive in everything fanboys dominate: think of gaming tournaments, for instance. Imagine if Yuletide writers were charged entry fees and had a chance to win $750,000, the top prize at the World Series of Video Games. Then imagine if there were elimination rounds. Down goes Master and Commander! Shit, there went Hot Fuzz!

"Perhaps the FanLib founders feared their members would join Take180 and make a wreck of its forums, sullying its Disney purity."

I can say right away that this speculation is not true. If it had been, they would not have invited several FanLib members to the beta test of Take180 (which started out a while before they announced FanLib would close).

No FanLib member mentioned it at the time. Considering how many FanLib members were angered by the abrupt closure, it's surprising there was no leak. I wonder if the members knew they were testing a product that was going to be sold to Disney.

It's also mind boggling that FanLib would ask FanLib members to test a product they would later deny producing. FanLib refused to confirm the Disney buyout, and yet they STILL sought free labor to test the converted product? Wow. What assholes.